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基本説明
This dissertation is a historical investigation of the relationship between science and society through the comparative study of eugenics movements as they developed in both Japan and China from the 1890s to the 1940s.
Full Description
This dissertation is a historical investigation of the relationship between science and society through the comparative study of eugenics movements as they developed in both Japan and China from the 1890's to the 1940's.
Contents
List of TablesAcknowledgementsChapter 1. IntroductionA. Eugenics: A Global InterestB. Eugenics: Local SignificationConcluding RemarksChapter 2. Eugenics and Scientific DisciplinesThe American Connection and Nazi ConnectionTransplantation: Medicine and BiologyLocal Science and Competition StrategyEugenics and Disciplining LearningConcluding RemarksChapter 3. Lamarckism versus Mendelism: The Politics of Bodyb and HereditySymptoms: National Character and the Eugenicists'PresentationDiagnosis and Remedies: Eugenic Proposals, Lamarckian or Mendelian?A. ChinaB. JapanConcluding RemarksChapter 4. Birth Control or Sex Control?: Eugenics and ReproductionSexuality versus Morality: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in China and JapanPolitics of Reproduction Knowledge: Women Scientists and their LivesConcluding RemarksChapter 5. Eugenics in the Second Sino-Japanese War and Population PoliciesJapanese Eugenicists' Involvement and Population Policy: Constructing Ethnic Body and Racial BodyChinese Eugenic Solution and Population Policy: Constructing an Ethnic NationConclusion: Postwar Reflections of Two EugenicistsChapter 6. Conclusion: What Can We Learn From Eugenics?Chapter 7. Epilogue: The Comeback of Eugenics DiscourseBibliographyIndex